GOP's presidential candidate visits Israel as part of three-nation tour. His advisors say he's likely to receive 'enthusiastic' welcome in Israel and 'frosty' reception in PA

Associated Press|Published: 28.07.12 , 18:32

Mitt Romney's support for Israel
will likely earn the presumptive Republican presidential nominee a warm welcome from Israeli leaders when he visits on Sunday – and a frosty reception from Palestinians,
who fear he would do little to advance their stalled statehood
dreams.

Romney
is visiting Israel as part of a three-nation foreign tour that includes Britain and Poland.
He hopes it will boost his credentials to direct US national security and diplomacy.

The visit to Israel comes at a time when its leaders are weighing a military attack
on Iran,
the neighboring regime in Syria
is looking increasingly shaky and Mideast peace talks
are going nowhere.

Romney, a longtime friend of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu,
is expected to play up his critique of President Barack Obama's posture toward the Jewish state and his handling of Iran's suspected nuclear weapons
ambitions.

Romney and wife on way to Israel (Photo: Reuters)

Israeli political scientist Abraham Diskin says Romney can expect an "enthusiastic" reception, both because of his solid record of pro-Israel comments – and because he's not Obama. "What interests Israelis is Israel," Diskin said. "Romney has a very pro-Israel stance. He is very suspicious of the Arab world. (Israelis) are very suspicious of Obama."

In an effort to upstage Romney a day before he landed in Israel, the White House announced it was signing legislation expanding military and civilian cooperation
with Israel.

Still, with polls showing a close race, Romney hopes this showcase for his pro-Israel stance will help him to woo votes from traditionally Democratic Jewish voters
and evangelical Christians who zealously defend Israeli government policy. Obama has not visited Israel since he became president.

He will not see Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas,
Abbas aide Nimr Hamad said, though he will be sitting down with the Palestinian Prime Minister, Salam Fayyad,
in Jerusalem. The Romney campaign said the likely GOP nominee only had time in his schedule to meet with one Palestinian leader and that Fayyad has an existing relationship with Romney. The Abbas camp did not offer an explanation for why no meeting was planned.

Romney's relationship with the US-educated Netanyahu dates back decades, when they briefly overlapped in the 1970s at Boston Consulting Group, and the two men share conservative outlooks. A Romney bankroller, Sheldon Adelson, is financing a free Israeli newspaper that reflects Netanyahu's views.

Netanyahu has refused to endorse either presidential candidate, although his ties with Obama have been fraught.

Obama expands Israeli military aid (Photo: AFP)

"I will receive Mitt Romney with the same openness that I received another presidential candidate, then-Senator Barack Obama, when he came almost four years ago, almost the same time in the campaign, to Israel," he said when asked about the visit last Sunday on Fox News. "We extend bipartisan hospitality to both Democrats and Republicans."

Romney – like most politicians who make the trek to Israel – is likely to face questions such as whether he would endorse calls by some fellow Republicans to move the US Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem
and his stance on Israeli calls for Washington to release convicted spy Jonathan Pollard.

Romney has consistently accused Obama of putting too much pressure on Israel to make concessions to the Palestinians and of being too weak on Iran. He says he wants to present a clearer military threat to the Islamic Republic, with a stronger naval presence in the Gulf. Tehran denies it is seeking nuclear weapons.

At a war veterans' convention in Nevada this week, Romney accused Obama of being "fond of lecturing Israel's leaders."

"He has undermined their position, which was tough enough as it was," Romney said. The "people of Israel deserve better than what they have received from the leader of the free world."

Meanwhile, Palestinians fear Romney would be softer on Israel than Obama. Palestinian politician Hanan Ashrawi said that would doom any chance for resolving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and establishing a Palestinian state on lands Israel captured in the 1967 war.

"American foreign policy in the region is shaped by Israel and determined by what's good for Israel, and not even what's good for the US," Ashrawi complained.

Romney "will probably try to take it a notch higher," she said, and if the US refuses to put any pressure on Israel, "then there's no chance for peace."